Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Herta makes all right moves to win wet, wild IndyCar GP

- By Michael Marot

As Colton Herta set up his winning pass Saturday, all he could see were red flashing lights. He still charged forward. The 22-year-old California driver quickly darted to the inside of Pato O’Ward on a late restart, took the lead for good with nine laps to go and beat Simon Pagenaud to the finish line by 3.0983 seconds to win a wild, wacky, wet IndyCar Grand Prix.

“Pure talent,” Herta joked when asked how he persevered for his first win of the season despite the incredibly challengin­g weather conditions. “The most interestin­g thing is you never have a car that handles great in the wet and great in the dry, but it happened today.”

Getting to victory lane certainly wasn’t easy for Herta, who earned his first Indy win in his 10th series start at the track. He also became the first Honda driver to reach victory lane this season.

But on Saturday, he made all the right calls.

After qualifying 14th on the 27-car grid, he made the gutsy choice to switch from rain tires to dry tires just three laps into the race. While he initially struggled

to keep the cold tires on the track and nearly spun out on Lap 4 when he got sideways in the 10th turn on the 14-turn, 2.439-mile road course, Herta never flinched.

Somehow he hung on, quickly taking the lead and advantage of a move that allowed him to go from 15th to first. He stayed near the front of the pack the rest of the race, leading 50 of 75 laps in a two-hour race that had just 53 minutes, 22 seconds of green flag time.

It came on a day race strategist­s and drivers were constantly changing plans because of rain or the threat of rain. And

even when it appeared Herta made the wrong choice — like running on dry tires after Alexander Rossi and made an early switch back to rain tires — things worked out.

“What I said is with the track conditions right now it’s probably wets, but it you think it’s going to be dry we’ll go with slicks,” Herta said referring to the first of two late pit stops. “Immediatel­y when I got out there, I knew it was going to be tough so we came back in. Luckily, everybody followed our lead and did the wrong thing so we didn’t lose too many spots.”

Pagenaud and pole-winner Will Power struggled to navigate the spray coming off the other cars. Neither could see well enough for long enough in the first IndyCar rain race with the aeroscreen­s to catch Herta.

Still, the the two threetime race winners and former teammates felt as if they too had accomplish­ed something. Pagenaud, the French driver, gave Meyer Shank Racing its best finish of the season.

“That was nuts. The racing was phenomenal and the strategy was the name of the game today,” he said. “Sometimes second feels like a win. I would have liked to win today, but we’ll probably celebrate tonight like it was a win.”

Power took the points lead away from defending series champ Alex Palou and posted Team Penske’s best finish.

“At the end, you couldn’t see. I can’t imagine being back in 10th or something,” the Australian said. “Pretty crazy day, one to keep you on your toes and when to pick the right tire and don’t overdo it. Just survival.”

Race organizers knew weather would be a factor.

They moved the start time up about 30 minutes with the hope of a wet track. Instead the start was delayed — first because of nearby lightning in the area and then because of a steady light rain.

The cooler, damper track changed everything. There were spins and crashes, even cars struggling to stay in line under caution. And nobody, not even the series’ top names, were immune.

Team Penske scrambled to get two-time series champ Josef Newgarden back on the course after his car was damaged in a Lap 17 crash. Power lost three spots on the first lap and never completely recovered and Scott McLaughlin, Penske’s third driver, lost the lead when he spun under caution.

 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Colton Herta drives during an IndyCar auto race at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway, Saturday, May 14, 2022, in Indianapol­is.
DARRON CUMMINGS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Colton Herta drives during an IndyCar auto race at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway, Saturday, May 14, 2022, in Indianapol­is.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States